Dubai makes solid plans for second airport as it begins to outgrow first

Andrea Rothman, Bloomberg

- Mar 09, 2013 7:34 am

Skift Take

When you have easy access to a third of the world’s population and a compliant local authority you have little to stop you on the road to success.

— Jason Clampet

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Dubai Airports said it’s in advanced talks with several airlines about bringing passenger traffic into a second airport as it begins the transition from the existing hub that will run out of space within the decade.

The airport authority may make an announcement on operators in coming weeks, said Chief Executive Officer Paul Griffiths. Dubai World Central, as the new airport closer to the center of the city is called, will have capacity by 2027 for 80 million passengers, and eventually grow to 160 million, more than double at London Heathrow International.

Dubai’s rulers have sought to exploit the sheikdom’s geographic position at the heart of intercontinental flight paths to develop an airport that can help local carrier Emirates win a higher share of long-haul traffic. Since Griffiths joined from London’s Gatwick Airport in 2007, Dubai International airport has almost doubled traffic to 57.7 passengers, putting it on a path to match Heathrow by the end of 2013.

“When I started, Sheikh Ahmed gave me the objective to make sure nothing constrained the aviation industry,” Griffiths said in an interview in Berlin on March 5. “It’s nice to have one clear objective.”

A third of the world’s population lives within three hours flying distance from Dubai, and two thirds lives within eight hours, according to Griffiths, making the location optimally placed to serve global traffic intersections.

Dedicated concourse

Emirates and all other passenger airlines operating in Dubai now fly in and out of Dubai International airport. The airport boasts three terminals and is undergoing a $7.8 billion expansion plan that will boost capacity to 90 million passengers by 2018. Part of that project involved the construction of an area specially dedicated to the Airbus SAS A380, the world’s largest passenger aircraft.

The A380 concourse, the world’s first facility built solely for the superjumbo, opened Jan. 2 and exclusively serves the doubledecker jets operated by Emirates, with the different travel classes segregated from the time they access the concourse. It may later take A380s operated by Qantas Airways Ltd., which has a partnership with Emirates, and may also take other big planes flown by Emirates, including Boeing Co. 777s, Griffiths said.

Until now, the new airport has handled only freight operators. Its one runway will eventually expand to five parallel lines, and Dubai will add concourses to the point where it expects to have 120 aircraft movements an hour by about 2025. By comparison, Gatwick, Griffith’s alma mater, has less than half the amount of movements.

Eventual switch

Emirates, whose CEO is Sheikh Ahmed bin Saeed Al Maktoum, isn’t going to switch over to the new airport before it reaches 80 million in passenger capacity because the airline’s mode is based on an integrated hub that lets customers connect to any other flight within 75 minutes, Griffiths said. Once the traffic has moved, the authorities will seek another use for the old facility, Griffiths said, without elaborating.

Even as the government-owned airport authority begins to move passenger airliners into the new facility, located 35 kilometers (22 miles) from the other site, Emirates will remain at Dubai International until it reaches saturation point, when it will switch over, Griffiths said.

The Dubai government is still weighing whether it makes more sense to accelerate a move from Dubai International to Dubai World, or to let it happen more slowly, Griffiths said.

“We’re looking at alternatives now, and in a few months we’ll have a clear position,” he said. “One plan is to build up quickly, within a 12-year frame. The other calls for longer, incremental growth over 15 years.”

Several equations

Either way, operating both hubs simultaneously for some time poses its challenges, said Griffiths, whose previous career stints include work for Richard Branson’s Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd.

“There are various equations,” he said. “Can you operate two airports, one of 160 million, one of 100 million passengers, within 35 kilometers and cope with these buzzing bees in the sky?”

Among the other challenges is devising a unified system to help manage the increased number of flights. Air traffic control in the Gulf region is still a patchwork of centers under individual, sovereign nations, requiring hand-offs for pilots as they pass from one air space to another. Still, going back to the low-growth pace of western European aviation is not an option, Griffiths said.

“In the developed western world, everything is well organized, everything is thought through and there are regulations for everything,” Griffiths said. “The unfortunate thing is, in mature societies, there are far more things you can’t do than you can do. In Dubai, I was allowed to paint the canvas with any brush and any color.”

Editors: Benedikt Kammel, Christopher Jasper. To contact the reporter on this story: Andrea Rothman in Toulouse at aerothman@bloomberg.net. To contact the editor responsible for this story: Benedikt Kammel at bkammel@bloomberg.net.